Fall 2009-10 TV Preview

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This is crossposted from http://alwayson247.blogspot.com/ which I guess I'm going to try to update regularly with each episode of all these shows. I have no clue if I'll follow through or completely fail and abandon it! I might post them here too, I dunno.

September came faster than ever this year, and while that means the end of summer, it also means the beginning of the 2009-10 TV Season! There are and were a lot of good and fun summer series, but now the networks are kicking into high gear. This isn't going to be any sort of comprehensive list of shows this year - just the ones I'm going to watch and possibly write about. As with any season, there could be a lot of surprises that get added to my list later. Let's start with the premiere tonight that is inspiring this post's kickstart:

Glee, Season 1, Fox, Wednesdays(9/9) 8pm/Central
-This is slightly a weird situation since the pilot aired last spring, but I'm considering this second episode the real premiere of the series. The easy way to boil this down would be High School Musical- The Series. But that's selling the dark edge to the comedy way short. Jane Lynch's evil cheerleading coach is a delight, and her vendetta against show choir even better. The world of Glee isn't completely realistic, but that doesn't take away from the charm or humor in any way. The sense of hope and going for your dreams in the main characters is pretty uplifting, even if the show makes fun of the characters and itself frequently. My favorite line from the pilot has to be "There's nothing ironic about Show Choir!" It sums up what I'm excited for about this show - simultaneously glorifying the musical and high school genre while simultaneously making fun of them.

Fringe, Season 2, Fox, Thursdays(9/17) 8pm/C
-There isn't much argument that the first season of Fringe was uneven. Some of the monsters of the week fell flat, and nothing interesting happened to expand or enrich the world of the Mad Scientist Walter and FBI Agent Olivia. That being said, the season finale was a showstopper, introducing Leonard Nimoy as Walter's foil and Massive Dynamic founder William Bell. If that wasn't shocking enough, the location was some sort of alternate reality. All the weird things on the Fringe (heh, heh) finally came together for the payoff with a completely different universe. Something tells me the first five minutes of this season is going to be incredibly interesting.

Parks and Recreation, Season 2, NBC, Thursdays(9/17) 730pm/C
-I was one of the few fans of this show in its first 6-episode season. A lot of people thought it was The Office-lite and took all the annoying parts of that show. Amy Poehler was also widely not liked for doing a Michael Scott impersonation. However, I thought this show definitely worked, and loved all the goofy characters. By the end of the 6th season, nearly the entire cast felt fleshed out and real. The banality and bureaucracy of small-time government just really struck a funnybone with me. I loved the show as an absurd and irreverent version of The West Wing. I'm glad it got a second season, and definitely hope it continues to be a staple on NBC's killer Thursday comedy lineup.

The Office, Season 6, NBC, Thursdays(9/17) 8 pm/C
-The end of the last season of the Office left me a little cold. It still was funny every week, and had a lot of interesting plot developments. But the Michael Scott Paper Company storyline got a little too stupid and too stretching believability for me. I did love Holly's return in the finale, and those scenes were some of the best of the year. Pam's pregnancy is the most boring and typical direction they can go, and I really hope it's not a big part of the next season. As derogatory as the last few sentences have been, I'm still fairly certain I'm going to watch it every week.

Community, Season 1, NBC, Thursdays(9/17) 830 pm/C
- I don't have much to say about this show, because I haven't even seen the pilot. That's not gonna stop me from going ahead and putting it on my watchlist! It looks like a unique take on a "college show", for once not focusing on freshmen and frat parties. Joel McHale seems like he can definitely pull off anchoring this show, but there are a few great other actors to fall back on. I'm excited to see Chevy Chase actually being funny again, and Ken Jeong has a great track record of being a great supporting comic actor.

It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia, Season 5, FX, Thursdays(9/17) 9 pm/C
-If you would have shown me the pilot to this show and told me it would be going for five seasons, I wouldn't have believed it for a second. But here we are, Season 5 of Always Sunny starting imminently. There isn't much else to say about this show, except it's the funniest show on TV. This should be another great season.

Bored to Death, Season 1, HBO, Sundays(9/20) 830 pm/C
- I'll give almost any show on HBO a shot- as a network, their track record speaks for itself. But this show looks very interesting. Jason Schwartzmann plays a recently-jilted NYC writer who decides to become a private eye despite having no license or training whatsoever. The two main supporting players are the most interesting part for me - Zach Gilfanakis and Ted Danson. Being on HBO, and the great cast so far, I can't wait to see this show.

How I Met Your Mother, Season 5, CBS, Mondays(9/21) 8 pm/C
- HIMYM is consistently the best show on TV at milking its premise for all it's worth. It's fun to see them link all of these wacky stories to the central idea of a father telling his children about his single life leading up to meeting their mother. The latest wrinkle in the season finale did a great job at both having a major life change for the main character(going from architect to teacher) and vastly narrowing the possible "mother candidates" to everyone in the classroom with Ted at Season 4's close. But who cares about Ted's lovelife or lack thereof? I just want to get back to more Barney antics and -isms. Even if he might be tied up with Robin.

Castle, Season 2, ABC, Mondays(9/21) 9 pm/C
- There are a billion stupid detective shows and Law & Order clones on TV with a billion murders to solve every single week. It'd be really easy to look at Castle, roll your eyes, and never think about it again. But look again. Title character Richard Castle is hilarious, and the interplay between the two lead characters is better than any on TV right now. The most impressive part of the shortened first season was the meta jokes with the writer pursuing criminals and pondering what motives would make the best story at times. The least impressive? The entirely unfair season finale cliffhanger that seemed to wrap up 5 minutes short. I would have watched Season 2 anyways, promise!

Flashforward, Season 1, ABC, Thursdays(9/24) 7 pm/C
- I was on the fence with this one, but eventually gave in hoping it will be more like Lost than Six Degrees. I'm already interested in the mystery of it just from the show description and basic idea. And I have a feeling the pilot will add a lot more wrinkles before it's over.

Dexter, Season 4, Showtime, Sundays(9/27) 8 pm/C
- This is a great show that I'm hoping can rebound from a pretty lackluster 3rd season. It's a little worrisome that having a child and being married will put a crimp in Dexter's murderous ways, but hopefully the show and the character will meet those challenges head-on. Also, a couple casting spoilers have me very excited.

30 Rock, Season 4, NBC, Thursdays(10/15) 830 pm/C
- NBC is obviously saving the best for last. The latest network premiere that I'm interested in this year also happens to be the best sitcom. Since its first season, 30 Rock has ranked among the smartest comedies on TV. I can't wait to see how they can follow up the hilarious star-studded season finale.


Bubble shows: House, Big Bang Theory, NCIS, NCIS:LA, Modern Family, Cougar Town, Grey's Anatomy, Californication, Nip/Tuck

These are all shows I'm on the bubble about including for whatever reason. Either watching regularly or writing about. Anything that I haven't listed I either have no hope for it being good, or I completely forgot. Here's to a great 2009-10 TV season!
 
I can't wait for next week's Office premiere. I have a couple gripes with the show that I could go into, but when it comes right down to it, I love all the characters and wanna see more of their adventures.
 

ElJuski

Staff member
I was a little out cold with the pregnancy thing, but then again, the Office was always a bit stretched and soapy. Well maybe not always...but for a good portion of the series. Still hella excited.

You can check out the Community pilot on Facebook, by the way, by becoming a fan and joining their stupid application. The pilot didn't have me dying, but Joel McHale is really funny, as well as Oliver Whatshisname as the Professor.

Personally, I can't wait to dig into the new season of Sunny and Venture Bros. Venture Bros. specifically has me tingling with anticipation.
 
OH YEAH

I forgot about Venture Bros.

Goddamn that show is excellent.

That golden action is so crunchy.
 
Right off.

Watch it Charlie, you have recommendations from me and Juice, and the three of us have fairly similar tastes in these things.

FUCKING DO IT
 
Glee - Got the director's cut of the pilot off iTunes two nights ago. It was cute, so I'll be interested in at least giving it a chance. I am a little bit sore though about FOX, and the fact that apparently a single episode costs something in the order of $3 million to shoot, makes me wonder what has been chopped to make this fit. But I won't wonder about it for too long.

Fringe - If you had told me this show got canceled, I would have believed you. I watched the first few episodes faithfully, but I fell off the bandwagon at some point, and completely forgot that there was a wagon at all. This is a candidate for a show I should catch up on, especially if it managed to land a second season. I pretty much love Walter.

The Office - My feelgood show. I will watch it, and I will laugh. I don't particularly care what's going on in the story arcs, as long as it brings the funny.

Community - I hadn't even heard of this, but somehow my interest is piqued. Sounds like it will be quite different from Greek (see below)

How I Met Your Mother - I stopped caring about Ted Mosby at some point last season, and only continued to watch for the sake of Barney Stinson. The finale made me care about Ted a little more, so now I have my original motivation to watch back.

Castle - I once read someone (probably on this forum) state that Nathan Fillion could play a man watching paint dry, and make it interesting. It's true. The fact that the story has pulled me in is just a bonus.

Flashforward - This looks interesting. I remember someone mentioning it a while back, and talking about the short story it's based on. I had forgotten it, but when I saw an ad on TV the other night, it reminded me. I'll be keeping an eye out.

House - The formula still hasn't gotten old for me, but I do have one complaint. I realize that this show relies on the status quo, but it does annoy me how quickly they return to it. "Wilson hates House? Wow, this could be an interesting season while they rebuild their relationship! Oh, it only took three episodes. Okay then ..." For this reason, I'm skeptical about whether last season's finale will make for an awesome season, but I'll watch anyways.

Big Bang Theory - Another feelgood show. I enjoy living vicariously through Leanord, which says to me that this show is doing exactly what it intended.

Shows I'm adding to my list:

Greek - One of my guilty pleasures. I am painfully aware with each passing season, though, that in-show time is passing much more slowly than real time. After three years on air, they're only entering their second half of their third term? Not complaining. It's just curious.

Defying Gravity - I got pulled in by the free pilot + first episode on iTunes. Season's half over as of this past Monday, but I look forward to seeing it through to it's end.

Scrubs - It'll be different, and it'll probably be crap. But I can respect what one of the writers said in an interview. It was along the lines of "Yeah, it could suck, but we might as well try, right?"

I know I'm forgetting a few others, but I'll just add them to this if I remember them.
 
OH YEAH

I forgot about Venture Bros.

Goddamn that show is excellent.

That golden action is so crunchy.
Venture Bros and Metalocalypse becoming a 30 minute show are pretty much mostly what I'm stoked for in the coming season of TV.

Though I am a little worried about how the lengthening of the show will effect Metalocalypse.
 
T

ThatNickGuy

Hey Rob, Flash Forward's actually based on a full-length novel of the same name by Robert J. Sawyer. Great book. I'm looking forward to the show because I love the book, but I'm iffy that they reduced the time jump from several decades to...what was it? A few months to a year, I think?

Also, I'm kinda excited for V.

HIMYM will always be great.

Scrubs, I'm iffy about, but I'm willing to give it a few episodes as a tryout.
 
The reason I like the pregnancy thing on The Office is because usually sitcom relationships, especially after a long will-they-won't-they period, have to break up before anything serious happens. Now watch, they'll break up or whatever, but up till now they've weathered some difficulties but ended up engaged and (we presume) having a baby. That's a realistic arc for a functional relationship, and I think it works well against all the goofy goings-on and shenanigans.

Thanks for that run-down, CDS.
 
The reason I like the pregnancy thing on The Office is because usually sitcom relationships, especially after a long will-they-won't-they period, have to break up before anything serious happens. Now watch, they'll break up or whatever, but up till now they've weathered some difficulties but ended up engaged and (we presume) having a baby. That's a realistic arc for a functional relationship, and I think it works well against all the goofy goings-on and shenanigans.

Thanks for that run-down, CDS.
The reason I DON'T like the pregnancy thing is because Jim and Pam's relationship has been going far too well. They've had a couple minor issues but everything worked out really well. They've never had a televised fight, or at least not one that wasn't almost instantly resolved.

It's just that every episode that they continue being lovey-dovey happy-happy, the eventual problem ESCALATES. In my mind anyway.

I just can't shake the paranoia that, now that they're expecting, something CAD is gonna happen...
 

ElJuski

Staff member
Nahh, it won't. I used to have that feeling that the Office writers were going to dick us over, but as the season winds on, they're just trying to give us the drama that's associated with the little things throughout these episodes. Like in real life, some new, charming guy doesn't necessarily become the downfall of a relationship. Or, when your crazy boss leaves the company to start his own paper company and you tag along only to find out how crazy it all really is and you start working in the same building as your old company with a guy that went to Taiwan for a while but really he didn't and then, man oh man

---------- Post added at 02:39 PM ---------- Previous post was at 02:38 PM ----------

what I'm trying to say is that, for the most part, I'm glad that The Office isn't wrecking Pam and Jim. In fact, amongst all the other madness, their continuous puppy-love is kind of...pleasant? I guess.

We'll see how the new season goes.
 
I hope Pam isn't pregnant off-camera at home away from the office for too long. I'm worried the family will be a way kind of writing her and Jim out. Even though they haven't been super funny lately.
 
People still watch TV, on a TV, at designated constrained time settings while being forced to watching commercials every 9 minutes? :bush:
 
I have a horrible memory for when shows are being aired, even shows that I'm really into.

I normally catch them the next day, by streaming if I have to, but via iTunes if I can.
 
DVR for the win. I do however like when shows are aware they have commercial breaks, and do something beyond a minor cliffhanger going into them.
 

Shannow

Staff member
I guess I am the only one looking forward to Smallville.

Pretty much. I now jsut wait until the end of a season, torrent it, and then watch it out of some sick sense of obligation (or maybe masochism).

I have watched so much of it, it almost seems like a challenge the show is putting forth to try to get me to not watch it anymore with complete horriblness, but I will be damned if I let those bastards win. :flipoff:
 
People still watch TV, on a TV, at designated constrained time settings while being forced to watching commercials every 9 minutes? :bush:
I still watch on a TV, but I have no idea when the shows I like are on. I love flipping through "Now Playing" and going "Hey! There's a new Nurse Jackie!" The only stuff I watch non-time-delayed anymore is reruns or movies I've already seen, for background noise.
 
Glee is the rare show that my wife and I both like, so that's cool. I think the only other shows I'll be watching are Dollhouse and Burn Notice. Maybe Family Guy, etc. if I catch it on.

And yeah, there's no way I can sit down at a specific time to catch a show. They're usually on right around when I'm cooking/eating, playing with kids, or getting them bathed and to sleep. It's all downloaded a day or more later and can blissfully be paused at will.

EDIT: Oh yeah, Warehouse 13. I'll stick with that one, too.
 
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